Las Vegas Review-Journal

Wework buys Meetup to bring people together outside of work

- By Gerrit De Vynck Bloomberg News

Wework Cos., known for bringing people together in common spaces to work or even live, is buying Meetup Inc., which uses the internet to help people connect in the real world.

The deal is the latest in New Yorkbased Wework’s drive to multiply the ways it can use its hip co-working spaces around the world and find new ways to grow revenue and justify its nearly $20 billion valuation.

Wework has been on an acquisitio­n spree this year, buying smaller startups including Singapore-based co-working company Spacemob, computer coding academy The Flatiron School and investing in fast-growing women’s-only social club The Wing. It’s even testing a private elementary school for kindergart­ners in one of its New York locations.

“A lot of people say, ‘Oh my gosh, they’re growing too fast, they’re acquiring all these different things,’ ” said Scott Belsky, a venture partner at Benchmark Capital and an investor in Meetup. “Meetup makes sense, it might be one of the acquisitio­ns that makes the most sense.”

Terms of the agreement weren’t disclosed.

Wework already hosts thousands of people for “meetups” every year, Wework Chief Executive Officer Adam Neumann said in a blog post. “By joining our companies together we can accomplish even more,” he said.

Meetup’s Chief Executive Officer Scott Heiferman co-founded the company in 2002 to bring people together in real life in an increasing­ly online world. “If you think about it there is only one other significan­t entreprene­ur in our generation that’s saying the same thing, and it’s Adam Neumann,” Belsky said. “It’s very complement­ary in that way.”

Meetup, also based in New York, has long shunned taking on excessive amounts of venture capital, raising only about $18 million to date, according to private tech company database Crunchbase.

Meetup’s 35 million members mostly get together on weeknights and weekends, the company said. Wework, meanwhile, has 10 million square feet of space in 17 countries that’s mostly occupied on weekdays.

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